Multilateral Trade Liberalisation
and FDI: An Analytical Framework for the Implications for Trading Blocs
Abstract
Pascal L. Ghazalian
Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, University of Lethbridge,
Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Ryan Cardwell
Assistant Professor, Department of Agribusiness and Agricultural Economics,
University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
The proliferation of regional integration agreements (RIAs) over the
past several years has led to significant changes in the global configuration
of trade and investment activity. Multinational enterprises now face
the prospect of multilateral trade liberalisation that could significantly
affect the foreign direct investment (FDI) incentive structures that
were established within the range of current RIAs. RIAs that provide
preferential market access to member countries modify firms incentives
to undertake FDI activities and can lead to various permutations of
trade and investment creation and diversion. This article provides an
analytical framework for understanding the implications of multilateral
trade liberalisation for the incentive structures of firms to conduct
FDI and discusses how multilateral liberalisation could undo many of
the FDI activities that were initiated in response to previous RIAs.
Keywords: foreign direct investment, incentives, multilateral trade
liberalisation, regional integration agreements.
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